Mine Print Hash

Matt Dines & Cameron Otsuka

The weekly podcast from Matt Dines and Cameron Otsuka, where our team dissects the week's most important news and their impact on capital markets. From macroeconomic trends and policy decisions to geopolitical events and sector-specific developments, join the team for timely analysis and thoughtful conversations to help you form a narrative for the rapidly evolving capital markets landscape. www.mineprinthash.com

  1. SpaceX, FHLB Lending, and the Dollar Liquidity Scramble

    vor 4 Tagen

    SpaceX, FHLB Lending, and the Dollar Liquidity Scramble

    TL;DR: Dollar liquidity scramble. 📄 Summary SpaceX Taps Dollar Credit Markets Mine Print Hash Week 26 opens with SpaceX’s $25B bond offering, framed as the latest sign that AI infrastructure is consuming U.S. dollar investment-grade credit capacity. Matt says the AI buildout is “in full swing,” while June 2026 issuance is within $2B of the COVID-era record (00:02:00). * SpaceX raised $87.5B in its IPO, then added a five-part $25B debt deal — a “massive cash liquidity buildup” (00:01:00). * The proceeds largely rolled over older, higher-yielding debt tied to X and xAI via a bridge loan (00:05:00). Why The Bond Structure Matters Matt explains that SpaceX used 144A / Reg S offerings, a faster institutional/offshore route than a full public bond process (00:06:00). * The deal was “massively oversubscribed,” showing deep institutional demand (00:07:00). * SpaceX paid a 40–60 bps new-issuer concession versus BBB communications peers, but Matt compares its likely path to Netflix, Uber, and Meta moving toward public IG index inclusion (00:09:00). Digital Euro, Digital Yuan, Stablecoin Dollar The discussion shifts to monetary rails. Matt argues each bloc is evolving: Europe toward a CBDC-style digital euro, China toward cross-border digital yuan settlement, and the U.S. toward asset-based stablecoin rails (00:13:00). * The digital euro is still a 12-month pilot aimed at reducing reliance on U.S. card networks (00:16:00). * China’s CBETS system has 26 financial institutions signed on, putting it further along than Europe (00:18:00). * Matt’s most bullish U.S. signal is Circle beginning cross-border settlement work with Nomura in Japan — “real private sector adoption” (00:20:00). FHLB As “Second-To-Last Resort” Liquidity Matt connects Japan, carry trades, insurers, private credit, and FHLB data. He has noticed rising liquidity requests for FHLB bonds — a quiet “page A32” signal before the story reaches the front page (00:23:00). * FHLB acts like a “fast cash ATM pawn shop,” advancing dollars against eligible collateral before borrowers reach the Fed (00:26:00). * Q1 2026 saw record advances to life insurance companies, echoing the near-record IG issuance backdrop (00:28:00). * FHLB is tied to SOFR funding, with Matt estimating roughly $3.2T of SOFR-indexed floating-rate debt issued (00:31:00). Private Credit Stress Moves Into View Matt argues rising FHLB borrowing reflects private credit stress inside insurers and non-bank financial firms. Apollo’s Athene is highlighted as the system’s second-largest FHLB borrower, with advances above $20B as of 2025 (00:33:00). * Middle-market borrowers are increasingly using PIK interest — effectively IOUs — when they cannot make cash interest payments (00:35:00). * Matt says this rhymes with 2008 “Big Short” stories, but private credit is a smaller share of the total dollar-credit bubble; losses may be severe for exposed players without matching 2008 scale (00:38:00). Bitcoin Treasury Companies As Frontier Credit The final link is MicroStrategy and Bitcoin treasury companies. Matt compares MSTR with Blackstone, KKR, and Apollo, arguing they reflect the same non-bank dollar-credit cycle, with MSTR at the highest-beta frontier (00:41:00). * Bitcoin’s drawdown since Q3 2025 and stress in perpetual preferreds are presented as early signs of broader liquidity pressure (00:44:00). * Matt’s throughline: SpaceX, FHLB advances, private credit insurers, hyperscalers, and Bitcoin treasury firms are all “preparing for something bigger that’s coming down the pike” (00:45:00). 🔑 Key Takeaways * AI/hyperscaler funding needs are moving into U.S. IG credit markets. * Monetary rails are splitting into CBDC euro, digital yuan settlement, and U.S. stablecoin dollars. * FHLB advances are a key liquidity stress signal for insurers exposed to private credit. * Bitcoin treasury companies are the high-beta frontier of the same dollar-liquidity cycle. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    47 Min.
  2. AI Export Controls and the Warsh Era: Fed Regime Change Amidst AI Sovereignty Challenges

    18. Juni

    AI Export Controls and the Warsh Era: Fed Regime Change Amidst AI Sovereignty Challenges

    TL;DR: Kevin Warsh’s first FOMC is framed as the start of a multi-year Fed regime change: less forward guidance, more institutional reform, and more credit directed toward real growth and AI. 📄 Summary Kevin Warsh’s First FOMC: A New Fed Era Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines open Mine Print Hash with Warsh’s first FOMC as Fed Chair, calling it a “new transitionary era” likely to play out over years (00:01:19). * Matt compares Warsh to a new coach entering an old locker room: the Fed “used to be winning,” but fell into complacency (00:02:32). * The message: the Fed has failed its objective for over five years, and “it’s time for institutional change” (00:05:15). Forward Guidance Is Out The core shift is Warsh rejecting the Bernanke/Yellen/Powell forward-guidance playbook, where markets trade every Fed clue on rates. * Matt says Warsh’s message was: “throw that whole playbook away” (00:06:41). * Forward guidance is framed as a recent early-2000s tool, not a permanent feature of central banking (00:07:50). * Matt contrasts it with “window guidance,” where credit is routed through banks toward industry, energy, infrastructure, housing, and real growth (00:10:05). Dots, Task Forces, and Culture Change Warsh did not ban the dot plot; he refused to submit one, letting the old behavior die “gradually, then suddenly” as others may follow (00:14:04). * He launched five task forces: inflation, communication, economic data, productivity/AI implementation, and jobs (00:17:31). * Matt sees these as the buy-in and policy ammunition needed to move a slow institution through 2026 (00:18:00). Market Reaction: Real Growth, Not Just Hawkishness The front end of the Treasury curve sold off, with two-year yields rising nearly 15 bps (00:20:07). * Matt argues nominal yields rising while breakeven inflation falls means fixed income is pricing stronger real U.S. growth, not just more inflation (00:22:30). * The larger throughline is a dollar-system transition away from QE, zero rates, forward guidance, and carry-trade finance toward credit creation for productive growth (00:24:01). BOJ Hikes and ECB Pressure The Bank of Japan’s hike continues its 2024 hiking cycle and, in Matt’s view, steals thunder from the ECB’s attempt to defend euro purchasing power (00:27:12). * Japan’s low inflation and upward-sloping yield curve give its banks room for credit expansion, pulling global liquidity toward Japan and the U.S. (00:28:00). * USD/JPY near 160 becomes a key test, with implications for the euro and the ECB’s back-foot position (00:30:00). Anthropic, Export Controls, and AI Sovereignty Cameron covers Anthropic’s Mythos/Fable 5 release, saying the U.S. government stepped in under export-control logic because access was supposed to be limited to U.S. citizens (00:33:09). * The issue has three lenses: marketing hype, national security, and who controls frontier AI access (00:36:23). * Identity and access become central: if platforms must distinguish adults from children or U.S. users from foreign users, stronger verification follows (00:42:00). * Matt ties this back to macro: AI may absorb much of the new credit creation, but cheap open-source models like Qwen/DeepSeek could create leakage from the U.S. credit-and-compute system (00:46:20). 🔑 Key Takeaways * Warsh’s Fed is framed as a multi-year institutional reset, not a one-meeting rate story. * Forward guidance and dot-plot worship are the old regime; window-guidance-style credit allocation is the possible new direction. * Watch real yields, breakevens, USD/JPY near 160, and ECB pressure as early signs. * AI is central to the credit-growth story, but access, export controls, identity verification, and open-source competition define the next sovereign-tech battleground. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    50 Min.
  3. Tokenized Assets: The Market Plumbing Contest

    11. Juni

    Tokenized Assets: The Market Plumbing Contest

    TL;DR: U.S. inflation is still rising, but the impulse is decelerating. Matt connects CPI, Hormuz energy flows, dollar onshoring, and tokenized securities into one Mine Print Hash thesis: capital-market gravity is moving away from the old offshore/continental system toward U.S./Western Hemisphere rails. 📄 Summary CPI: High, But Decelerating Matt says the key is the impulse: CPI was 0.47% month-over-month, annualizing to 5.6%, a “big impulse” (00:03:22). But after three post-Epic Fury prints, “the second derivative is negative,” meaning the impulse is slowing (00:03:59). * March was mainly energy as Brent/WTI spiked. Now services/shelter matter more, though Matt criticizes owners’ equivalent rent as a survey-based price signal (00:04:53). U.S. Broadening Test Transportation has stopped contributing in CPI, while core goods were negative month-over-month (00:07:29). * Matt’s read: higher food and energy costs are forcing households to pull back elsewhere, so the U.S. may be absorbing the shock through weaker discretionary demand. Europe Looks More Exposed The ECB hiked rates into weakening growth and falling demand for money/borrowing (00:08:08). Matt highlights Lagarde’s view that the shock is broadening through Europe, calling that “the opposite of transitory” (00:09:24). Despite the hike, the euro remains under pressure versus the dollar (00:11:14). Hormuz, U.S. Energy Exports & Dollar Onshoring Matt cites EIA data showing U.S. crude exports exceeded 6 million barrels per day since Iran (00:15:51). With exports and prices both up roughly 50%, he argues dollar cash flows into the U.S. may have at least doubled (00:19:24). * This supports the shift from an offshore liability-dollar world toward onshore dollar flows tied to U.S./Western Hemisphere energy. LNG, Europe & the Old World vs. New World Matt calls U.S. LNG exports the “rubber meets the road” data point (00:22:52). Europe is now a major destination, replacing the prior Russia-to-Europe commodity relationship after Nord Stream (00:23:43). Europe once had leverage over commodity suppliers, but not the same leverage against the U.S. Conflicting Hormuz Realities Matt contrasts headlines saying maritime insurance costs are 4,000x higher with Trump’s claim that 100 million barrels moved safely through Hormuz via 200 ships (00:27:50). His conclusion: either traffic collapses, or insurance premiums fall. “This tug of war” has to resolve (00:30:01). Tokenization as a Monetary Battle Cameron shifts to tokenized equities/RWAs, noting over $1.4B in tokenized value today (00:31:51). Matt says the trend has tripled since January 2025 and is part of a collateral battle (00:31:59). Tokenization can move real-world collateral into offshore crypto/DeFi systems; the U.S. defense is faster rails: 24/7 trading, faster settlement, and better back offices (00:35:06). Settlement Rails: BIS vs. Stablecoins + Bitcoin Matt points to DTC, NSCC, SIP, NYSE, Nasdaq, and CME preparing for new infrastructure (00:36:20). T+2 to T+1 was a major 2022 shift, but real-time 24/7 settlement may arrive much faster (00:37:34). * He contrasts BIS tokenized central bank reserves/CBDC-style outside money with the U.S. route of stablecoins plus Bitcoin-like inside money (00:40:30). Genius Act stablecoins already function as tokenized government debt backed by Treasury IOUs (00:41:30). 🔑 Key Takeaways * Watch services/core goods to confirm whether U.S. CPI keeps slowing. * Europe appears more exposed to sustained energy-driven purchasing-power loss. * U.S. crude/LNG exports are central to dollar onshoring. * Hormuz shipping/insurance data is the near-term stress test. * Tokenized securities are a battle over collateral, settlement, and monetary control. * Capital-market gravity appears to be leaving Basel/Frankfurt/London for U.S.-centered rails. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    51 Min.
  4. Hawkish Weakness: ECB Hikes, Dollar Flows, and Kalshi/Polymarket as Stablecoin Demand Markets

    4. Juni

    Hawkish Weakness: ECB Hikes, Dollar Flows, and Kalshi/Polymarket as Stablecoin Demand Markets

    TL;DR: Eurozone hawkish weakness, dollar liquidity squeeze, and stablecoin rails. 📄 Summary ECB Hikes Into Weakness Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines open Mine Print Hash Week 23 with markets signaling “potentially tough times ahead for the Eurozone” as swaps price a June 11 ECB hike and roughly three 25 bps hikes by year-end (00:00:12). * Matt frames this as “hawkish weakness”: the ECB is hawkish on rates, but the underlying economy is weak (00:02:12). The Four-Week T-Bill “Smoking Gun” Matt calls the four-week Treasury bill move the key signal, labeling it “Drowning Man Gasping for Air” after the Memorial Day rush into T-bills (00:03:33). * The Hormuz/Epic Fury commodity shock cut global energy supply, forced non-energy-producing developed markets to scramble for dollars, and pushed liquidity into New York: “the direction of liquidity flows is into New York” (00:06:23). * Higher commodity inputs choke demand, delay spending, and reduce borrowing/growth. Fed Balance Sheet Expansion Buys Runway The hosts tie dollar inflows to Fed “Reserve Management Purchases,” which Matt says began after the December 2025 end-of-QT announcement (00:07:08). * Fed T-bill holdings were growing at nearly a 900% annualized pace before April 7, then slowed toward roughly 100%—still “hundreds of billions of dollars” this year (00:07:43). * Matt calls this a “battle of attrition” where the ECB blinking first shows the U.S. has passed the pressure to Europe (00:09:00). German Yields And The ECB’s 3% Defense To pull savings back into euro money markets, the ECB must raise the short end while preventing long-end Bund yields from breaking higher. Matt says Christine Lagarde needs to defend the German yield around 3% to avoid a sovereign-debt “long end hiccup” (00:12:19). * He compares 2026 to 2022: both feature geopolitical commodity squeezes, but now Europe carries more of the adjustment burden (00:13:17). Gold, The Old Dollar, And The Stablecoin Dollar The FT headline that gold replaced Treasuries as the top reserve asset is framed not as Eurozone strength, but as evidence that the old offshore eurodollar system is being drained (00:14:56). * Matt says the dollar is shifting from an “offshore liability” system toward an “asset-based dollar” built around stablecoins (00:15:30). CFTC Approval And New Market Rails Cameron introduces the CFTC’s approval of Kalshi BTC perpetuals as a new way to source Bitcoin liquidity outside legacy venues (00:18:50). * Matt says this is part of the shift from counterparty-balance-sheet liquidity and central clearing toward stablecoin-funded rails (00:20:31). * CME and Intercontinental Exchange reactions are presented as evidence that legacy exchange moats are shrinking as Kalshi, Polymarket, Hyperliquid, and similar platforms compete (00:22:25). Polymarket Shows The Stablecoin Flywheel A Polymarket Browns Super Bowl bet illustrates the plumbing: users fund with USDC, both sides post collateral, and stablecoins sit in escrow while T-bill yield flows through issuers and partner revenue-share arrangements (00:25:00). * Prediction markets, crypto hedging, and global event contracts become another demand source for stablecoins beyond cross-border settlement (00:28:34). Bitcoin Reserve: “Deliberate Speed” The final topic is Scott Bessent’s testimony that the U.S. is moving on the Bitcoin Reserve at “deliberate speed” (00:31:32). * Despite weak Bitcoin sentiment, Matt sees this as part of a U.S. roll-up of new dollar rails so control stays in New York and D.C. rather than offshore (00:32:23). 🔑 Key Takeaways * The ECB is being forced to hike into weakness while the U.S. captures dollar liquidity. * Stablecoin rails are challenging legacy exchange and clearing monopolies. * Prediction markets and BTC perps may become major stablecoin demand engines. * Bitcoin weakness does not invalidate the long-term Reserve/stablecoin-dollar framework. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    36 Min.
  5. The Yen Battlefront: Europe's Weak Hand and the Dollar Stablecoin Hierarchy

    28. Mai

    The Yen Battlefront: Europe's Weak Hand and the Dollar Stablecoin Hierarchy

    TL;DR: Europe’s energy shock is becoming sovereign-debt stress, offshore dollar liquidity is signaling disinflation, and Japan is the next battleground in the stablecoin vs. eurodollar transition. 📄 Summary Europe Admits The Energy Shock Cameron Otsuka frames the episode around Europe’s energy/debt stress, the offshore dollar system, and Japan’s role in stablecoins (00:00:04). Matt Dines says Europe is “admitting it’s lost this phase of the Iran fight” through energy and commodity supply chains (00:01:31). * EU officials expect oil/gas prices to stay elevated through 2027, while Christine Lagarde “double stamped” that price levels will likely be higher after the crisis (00:02:48). * Throughline: weaker commodity access means higher input costs, lower growth, sovereign-bond stress, and more ECB/European monetary centralization. ECB Forecasts: Lower Growth, Higher Prices Matt highlights eurozone real GDP growth near 0.9%, “spitting distance from zero,” while inflation forecasts move higher (00:04:19). * He separates CPI inflation from monetary inflation: energy can lift measured prices while reducing private-sector demand for new debt (00:04:53). * The ECB Financial Stability Review is the “real payload”: sustained energy shock can force “abrupt repricing” in sovereign bonds, pushing yields up and bond prices down globally (00:06:02). Money Markets Show Eurodollar Stress Cameron asks how this connects to U.S. money markets (00:08:48). Matt points to Memorial Day trading in the 4-week T-bill, where offshore flows bid the bill sharply lower in yield, as evidence of excess dollar supply and weak demand for new credit (00:10:00). * His read: Europe’s squeeze is growth-reducing and disinflationary from a credit-money standpoint, even if CPI energy prices rise (00:14:00). Japan Becomes The Next Battleground Matt calls Japan the next major theater in the move “from the offshore euro dollar to the stablecoin dollar future” (00:18:00). * Japan imports commodities, invoices them in dollars, and cannot rely on yen globally. That forces Japanese banks through legacy offshore dollar rails to access Treasury-like dollar claims (00:20:00). * Yen weakness and gold priced in yen show Japan needs dollar liquidity without depending solely on the old eurodollar/SWIFT structure (00:22:00). Stablecoins As A One-Hop Treasury Claim Matt argues T-bill-backed stablecoins can give Japan direct access to a one-to-one Treasury claim, settling commodity trades while bypassing the “VIG” of the Belgium-centered SWIFT/eurodollar system (00:26:00). * If Japan integrates stablecoins, other dollar-needing economies could follow, tightening the noose around the old offshore eurodollar framework (00:32:00). Tether, Liquidity, And The Transition Signal Cameron asks about Tether “breaking the buck” (00:33:35). Matt says Tether’s exchange rate versus offshore dollars has trended down since May, signaling liquidity being pulled out of stablecoins and back into the credit-dollar system (00:34:00). * He contrasts legacy Tether with regulated, T-bill-backed stablecoins under the Genius Act framework, saying the compliant version is closer to the U.S. Treasury-backed dollar future (00:36:00). * Japan’s June 1 stablecoin implementation is the test: “If Japan stays upright throughout the summer,” the U.S.-led monetary transition gains momentum (00:38:00). 🔑 Key Takeaways * Europe faces higher energy prices, lower real growth, and sovereign-debt repricing risk. * CPI inflation can rise while monetary/credit inflation weakens. * Offshore dollar markets show weak borrowing demand and a bid for short-term collateral. * Japan is critical because it must import commodities, source dollars, and defend yen/JGB stability. * T-bill-backed stablecoins are presented as the new rail to bypass eurodollar/SWIFT friction. * If Japan holds this summer, the stablecoin/Treasury transition accelerates. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    42 Min.
  6. Treasury Supremacy: Stablecoins, Bitcoin, and the Building New Dollar Rails

    21. Mai

    Treasury Supremacy: Stablecoins, Bitcoin, and the Building New Dollar Rails

    TL;DR: The “new dollar” framework: Bessent’s 3-3-3 plan, stablecoins, Bitcoin reserves, and money-market stress point to a U.S. monetary transition away from CBDCs and legacy fiat credit expansion. 📄 Summary Bessent’s 3-3-3 Plan & The New Dollar Cameron frames the episode around Scott Bessent’s 3-3-3 goal: 3% real growth, a 3% deficit, and 3 million additional barrels of domestic energy production. Matt says the key message is: “We’re going to monetize the asset side of the U.S. balance sheet for the American people” (00:02:53). * Stablecoins, Bitcoin reserves, digital asset regulation, and energy policy are milestones in one broader monetary transition. * Matt’s core claim: “It’s a new dollar. It’s going to be a different dollar” (00:04:21). Private Money vs. CBDCs Matt argues the 2024 election was effectively a referendum on public money/CBDCs versus private-sector dollar issuance via stablecoins. He defines stablecoins as “private money issuance” (00:03:39). * The Biden-era path pointed toward CBDCs and state-controlled rails; the Trump/Bessent path pivots toward private stablecoins, Bitcoin, and commercial-bank-led rails. * Matt says this path “stops the progression of this existing system’s perpetual credit expansion” (00:05:53). Five-Step Implementation Roadmap Matt’s milestones: shift policy toward innovation; organize federal Bitcoin under Treasury; merge Fedwire/FedNow with stablecoin rails; tailor bank regulation; and cement CBDC rejection with private stablecoin primacy (00:12:49). * EO 14178 revoked Biden’s EO 14067 and redirected policy away from CBDCs (00:17:31). * EO 14233 created a strategic Bitcoin reserve framework; ARMA would treat Bitcoin more like gold on the federal balance sheet (00:20:29). Fed Access & Ledger Integrity The next phase is connecting crypto/stablecoin rails to existing settlement infrastructure. Matt points to Kraken receiving a Fed master account and EO 14405 as steps toward central-bank settlement access (00:26:39, 00:29:02). * Ledger integrity is the key risk. Matt uses Synapse as the warning: 100,000+ Americans and $265M+ in deposits were caught in a failure where “we didn’t know who owned what” (00:34:45). Global Uptake: Japan, Gold & Competing Systems Matt says Japan’s move to onboard U.S. dollar stablecoins proves the product is gaining international adoption (00:38:49). * China’s competing track is visible in gold: Hong Kong’s new gold clearing system and Shanghai price discovery represent an alternative asset-backed architecture (00:42:53). * Matt is watching Tokyo as the Western/Pax Silica financial gateway, analogous to Hong Kong’s gateway role into mainland China (00:46:56). Money Markets: Ships Going Into Harbor The episode closes by tying the transition to current stress. With Hormuz and commodity supply shocks pressuring inflation and global curves, Matt watches money markets for defensive positioning. * This week, $24B moved into RRP after allocations had been zero, signaling cash is “going to ground” (00:55:04). * The Fed may buy time by slowing T-bill purchases rather than cutting immediately, but if supply shocks hit growth, cuts may eventually be needed (00:57:04). 🔑 Key Takeaways * Bessent’s project is a monetary transition: monetize U.S. assets, elevate Bitcoin as a reserve asset, and scale private stablecoin dollar issuance. * The U.S. is rejecting CBDCs in favor of private-sector stablecoin primacy. * Executive orders are the “forms”; legislation like ARMA is the “concrete.” * Ledger integrity is the key risk as crypto rails merge with Fed and bank infrastructure. * Japan’s stablecoin adoption and China’s gold-clearing push show competing monetary architectures emerging. * Money markets are signaling caution; the “ships are coming into harbor” as cash moves defensively. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    1 Std. 5 Min.
  7. The Funding Squeeze: Sovereigns, Money Markets, and AI Compute

    15. Mai

    The Funding Squeeze: Sovereigns, Money Markets, and AI Compute

    TL;DR: Stablecoin dollars, money-market stress, and AI compute constraints are all converging into one macro regime shift. 📄 Summary Clarity Act and the Monetary Fork Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines open Mine Print Hash with Kevin Warsh “confirmed as Fed Chair” (00:00:39), then shift to the Clarity Act and GENIUS Act as the week’s key monetary development. * Matt frames the Tillis-Alsobrooks compromise as historically significant: a fork in the road for stablecoins, Treasury bills, and dollar issuance. * He argues the offshore dollar system “is being completely rewired” (00:03:38). Stablecoins as a Return to Treasury-Backed Money Matt connects the stablecoin framework to pre-1967 silver certificates, arguing stablecoins separate monetary issuance from bank lending and credit creation. * Pre-1971, people could exit the credit system through metal-backed money; today, “Your dollar is someone else’s liability” (00:08:25). * Stablecoins are described as a Treasury-bill-backed “evolutionary step” rather than a hyperinflationary revolution. * The Clarity Act has passed out of committee, but Matt warns it can still be killed in markup: “The Clarity Act can get killed here” (00:12:36). UK/EU Response: Walled Gardens vs. Open Dollar Rails The discussion turns international: the Bank of England, UK digital ID push, and ECB “Eurostablecoins” are framed as defensive responses to a U.S.-led stablecoin dollar system. * Matt contrasts open architecture dollar rails with permissioned “walled garden” systems (00:18:04). * Sovereign funding pressure becomes the battlefield, with UK gilt yields and weak Eurozone GDP signaling stress. Money Markets: Late-Cycle Liquidity Signals Matt argues money markets are flashing late-cycle warning signs, saying the system is “past the seventh inning stretch” (00:25:13). * Rising short interest in short-duration Treasury ETFs like BIL is interpreted as levered funds tapping low-cost cash. * SOFR futures show levered funds hedging against higher future funding costs; Matt’s key read: “SOFR is going to have to rise someday” (00:37:03). * Dealers can hedge through swaps, but rising sovereign yields reduce their capacity to absorb risk. Markets, Inflation, and the New Fed/Treasury Playbook Liquidity is showing up in QQQ, semiconductors, Micron, and AI-linked equities, but CPI/PPI constraints remain the key limiting factor. * Matt stresses this is not the old 1982–2021 bond bull market playbook; “the game itself may look different” for Fed, Treasury, and global dollar behavior (00:48:24). * April CPI/PPI pressure is tied to shelter, energy, transportation, warehousing, and supply-chain bottlenecks. AI Buildout: Memory, Compute, and Credit Capacity Cameron and Matt identify RAM, SSDs, hard drives, labor, and fabs as bottlenecks for the AI data-center boom. * Matt summarizes the growth model as “more compute equals more growth” (00:56:58). * Samsung labor issues, Chinese DDR5 progress, Micron capacity limits, and China trade policy all feed into whether the AI buildout can scale. * Roundhill’s switch from a 2x meme-stock ETF to a 2x memory ETF is treated as a cycle marker. Compute Futures and the Financialization of AI The CME/Silicon Data compute futures launch is framed as structurally important because it could turn compute into a centrally priced, hedgeable commodity. * Matt compares it to WTI futures in 1983 and Bitcoin futures in 2017: futures can stabilize prices, improve cash-flow certainty, and unlock credit. * “By lowering risk, you’ll get a credit expansion” (01:08:11). * AI credit demand is expected to widen corporate debt spreads and shift bond indices toward hyperscaler issuance. U.S.-China: Dialogue Channels Reopen The episode closes with Trump’s China visit. Matt argues the key outcome was not media spin, but the creation of U.S.-China trade and investment boards (01:16:20). * The goal is to keep non-sensitive trade flowing while negotiating sensitive AI, semiconductor, and national security issues. 🔑 Key Takeaways * Stablecoin legislation is being framed as a historic rewiring of dollar issuance. * Treasury-bill-backed stablecoins may separate money from lending in a way fiat banking blurred. * UK/EU digital money responses look more permissioned than the U.S. framework. * Money markets are showing late-cycle leverage and future rate-stress signals. * AI infrastructure is the new liquidity sink, but memory, compute, labor, energy, and credit are binding constraints. * Compute futures may become a major tool for stabilizing AI input costs and expanding credit. * U.S.-China trade boards are a constructive step toward managing AI-era geopolitical competition. 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    1 Std. 18 Min.
  8. The Trans Adriatic Pipeline: Eurasian Energy Corridor Chess Game

    7. Mai

    The Trans Adriatic Pipeline: Eurasian Energy Corridor Chess Game

    TL;DR: Energy corridors are the chessboard upon which major powers are competing. 📄 Summary Trans-Adriatic Pipeline & the Great-Power Chessboard Cameron Otsuka and Matt Dines open Mine Print Hash Week 18 by framing recent Trans-Adriatic Pipeline news as more than an energy story: it is a window into “political maneuvers” and influence campaigns around strategic corridors (00:00:12). Matt says the region sits between the “big four” spheres of influence — the U.S., China, Russia, and continental Europe/EU — and should be understood as a “chess game” where every move forces a response (00:02:14, 00:02:47). The throughline: pipelines, trade routes, currency blocs, and diplomatic summits are all part of the same contest over resources and influence. EU-Armenia Summit: Europe Moves Into the Caucasus Matt highlights the May 4–5 EU-Armenia summit in Yerevan, attended by 30+ European leaders plus Canadian PM Mark Carney, NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte, and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy (00:05:07). He views the summit as an attempt to pull Armenia further into the EU economic sphere through connectivity partnerships. Matt warns the move is “pushing the situation towards more instability, in my opinion, not less” because Armenia sits between Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, and Iran — a sensitive corridor already shaped by decades of conflict (00:07:12). Resource Access Is the Prize The discussion turns to pipelines and the “access to resources” framework from Daniel Yergin’s The Prize (00:09:48). Matt argues Europe’s shortage of energy access explains much of its geopolitical activity, as suppliers fight for access to demand markets and Europe tries to integrate east-west energy flows through Anatolia, the Balkans, and Central Europe. The proposed Trans-Caspian Pipeline is described as the “big Kahuna” because it would extend Europe’s energy integration across the Caspian toward Turkmenistan, tying into “new Silk Roads” and the revival of land-based trade routes (00:23:19, 00:24:16). Information War & Russia’s Warning Matt contrasts Austria’s supportive reaction with Russia’s negative reaction. Austria emphasizes fighting FIMI — foreign interference and misinformation — while Russia warns that Armenia is becoming a platform for the Kiev regime (00:14:38, 00:17:18). The episode connects this to modern influence campaigns: “there’s a lot of spin on the ball out there,” so the hosts emphasize going directly to source material where possible (00:15:40). Bulgaria, Romania, Hungary: Stress on the EU Periphery The hosts broaden the lens to Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary. Bulgaria adopted the euro in January, but recent elections showed political pushback toward the EU-aligned path (00:09:14, 00:26:52). Romania’s government collapse and the Romanian leu weakening to record lows become the episode’s financial chart, illustrating how countries between the EU and Russia absorb pressure from larger blocs (00:29:26, 00:30:14). Matt’s key point: the periphery is being “pulled apart and stressed and stretched” by heavyweight competition (00:38:02). U.S.-Iran Diplomacy & China’s Role The final section shifts to U.S.-Iran negotiations. Matt contrasts the older JCPOA framework with a new 14-point MOU that is structured as a phased trust-building process rather than a “zero to one overnight” deal (00:45:05, 00:47:16). China becomes a key actor, with Matt saying China “put its thumb on the scales” by pressuring the IRGC to cool tensions and by limiting loans to refineries buying sanctioned Iranian oil (00:49:07, 00:51:07). However, an attack on a Chinese oil tanker in the Strait of Hormuz is framed as escalatory and a test of whether diplomacy can hold (00:55:26). 🔑 Key Takeaways * Energy infrastructure is the surface story; resource access, currency alignment, and trade-route control are the deeper story. * Armenia is a critical hinge point in the Caucasus, and EU engagement there may force reactions from Russia, Turkey, Iran, China, and the U.S. * The Trans-Caspian / New Silk Road corridor could reshape 21st-century land trade and determine who captures value across Eurasia. * Peripheral European states like Bulgaria, Romania, and Hungary are early signals of stress inside the EU-Russia tug-of-war. * The U.S.-Iran 14-point MOU is presented as the best hope for de-escalation, but actors inside Iran, China, and the region may still sabotage the process. * Matt’s closing frame: Eastern Europe through Ukraine, the Caucasus, Iran, Israel, and Syria is “a giant mess” and likely “the story of the next five to ten years” (00:57:16). 📱 Social Media * Mine, Print, Hash: https://x.com/MinePrintHash * Matt Dines: https://x.com/LeveredUSTs * Cameron Otsuka: https://x.com/CameronOtsuka 🔗 Links * 🎧 Subscribe to Mine, Print, Hash: https://api.substack.com/feed/podcast/3184485.rss * 🌎 Build Asset Management: https://getbuilding.com * ⚓ Build Bond Innovation ETF: https://bfix.fund * 📈 Build Secured Income Fund I: https://buildbitcoin.com This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.mineprinthash.com

    58 Min.

Info

The weekly podcast from Matt Dines and Cameron Otsuka, where our team dissects the week's most important news and their impact on capital markets. From macroeconomic trends and policy decisions to geopolitical events and sector-specific developments, join the team for timely analysis and thoughtful conversations to help you form a narrative for the rapidly evolving capital markets landscape. www.mineprinthash.com

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